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Why human skills – but not the number of humans (sorry) – matter more as AI spreads at work
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Psychology Today’s Laura Berger argues that as AI becomes more prevalent in workplaces, the solution to avoiding the “Uncanny Valley”—where AI-generated content feels eerily human but emotionally vacant—lies in strengthening distinctly human capabilities rather than making AI more human-like. The piece emphasizes that longstanding relationships, metacognition, emotional intelligence, and adaptive momentum are irreplaceable human assets that become more valuable, not less, in an AI-driven world.

The big picture: The concept of the Uncanny Valley, originally applied to human-like robots that provoke discomfort, now extends to AI-generated workplace communications that hit technical marks but lack emotional resonance.

  • Berger suggests that instead of trying to make AI more human, we should focus on making our human systems “more connected, self-aware, and emotionally intelligent.”
  • The article positions AI as most powerful when used alongside uniquely human capabilities rather than as a replacement for them.

Key human advantages: Four distinct areas where humans maintain irreplaceable value in professional settings emerge from the research.

  • Historical insight: Long-term relationships provide years of context that help recognize genuine change and identify potential pitfalls.
  • Emotionally attuned support: Familiarity enables nuanced understanding of when to push forward and when to pause.
  • Rich synthesis: Trusted colleagues hold “decades of data AI doesn’t” and can see connections that transcend algorithmic training.

Why metacognition matters: The ability to reflect on thought processes—something AI lacks—becomes a leadership imperative as AI embeds deeper into decision-making.

  • Metacognition involves stepping back to ask questions like “Why am I approaching it this way?” and “Is this belief still serving me?”
  • AI doesn’t know when its predictions are wrong or whether its patterns have unintended consequences, making human oversight essential.
  • Good metacognition often emerges from dialogue with trusted colleagues who can mirror not only our ideas but our mental habits.

Why emotion matters: Cognitive neuroscience reveals that separating emotion from logic creates a false divide, as emotion actually drives cognition and fuels attention, motivation, memory, and behavior.

  • AI tools can mimic empathy in tone but lack true emotional processing, creating gaps in feedback delivery and relationship building.
  • “Emotional data often lives beneath the surface: a pause before a sentence, a shift in tone, a glance that says more than words.”
  • Emotionally intelligent conversations that change minds or hearts are built through trusted relationships over time.

Building trust through movement: Trust emerges not from perfection but from consistent, emotionally engaged interactions that demonstrate adaptability.

  • The neuroscience of trust suggests that collaborative iteration—a distinctly human strength—reinforces trust more than the illusion of certainty.
  • “We can reflect, revise, and respond. We can change our minds and say so. That kind of progress reinforces trust more than the illusion of certainty.”

What leaders should focus on: Berger recommends four specific areas for AI preparation that center on human capabilities.

  • Strengthen existing relationships and identify underutilized sources of strategy and reflection.
  • Sharpen metacognitive abilities to remain conscious of thinking processes.
  • Attune to emotional signals that AI cannot detect or process.
  • Prioritize adaptive momentum that creates shared understanding and transparency.

The bottom line: Rather than competing with AI on technical capabilities, the path forward involves deepening human connections and emotional intelligence to complement AI’s strengths while addressing its fundamental limitations.

Escaping the Uncanny Valley: Humanizing AI Starts with Us

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